Whitney Houston’s death last February made headlines around the world.
But, while most media outlets highlighted Houston’s battles with drug
addiction, the African American press tended to celebrate the
achievements of a woman who, yes, fought her personal demons, but who
is nonetheless a hero and a role model.

Marc Baptiste

Amy DuBois Barnett '91 with Michelle Obama.

So says Amy DuBois Barnett ’91, editor-in-chief of Ebony
magazine. Barnett reacted to Houston’s death by publishing a special
commemorative issue. That’s just one example of what keeps African
American media connected to their audiences, she says.

“Fundamentally I don’t think the role of African American media has
changed that much,” Barnett explains. “Unfortunately, African Americans
are still very underrepresented in mainstream media. Our readers come
to Ebony because they understand that we’re going to give them the
stories they might not see elsewhere, and we’re going to give them
these stories from a perspective that mirrors their own.”
Barnett became editor of the sixty-six-year-old magazine in July 2010, and the following April Ebony
debuted a top-to-bottom redesign that included new content and
sections. In January, Barnett launched a revamped website with a
retro-cool feel that makes ample use of the magazine’s archival images.

“The impression of the Ebony brand over the years had
really become very musty and dusty,” she says. “People thought of it as
their grandma’s magazine. I was very eager to shift that perception,
because, if it stayed in that world, literally our readership would die
out.”

Barnett’s current to-do list includes scoring a cover interview with rapper and producer Jay-Z.

Barnett’s vision seems to have paid off. Ebony says its
circulation grew 11 percent in 2011, while ebony.com has generated a
183 percent increase in unique visitors to date. MinOnline listed Ebony as one of the top five magazines to increase its advertising for the June 2012 issue.

Barnett brought to Ebony a strong background in African
American and general interest magazine publishing. Most recently she’d
been deputy-editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar. Before that she was managing editor of Teen People, editor-in-chief of Honey, and lifestyle editor at Essence.

Even so, taking on Ebony
was daunting, she says: “It’s terrifying to redesign an iconic brand,
especially in this declining newsstand environment we’re in right now.
It’s still a challenge. I’m constantly looking at research, trying to
fine-tune pages, tweak sections, and continue to make the product
better.”

The daughter of academics who moved from one university to another,
Barnett lived in nine cities on three continents while growing up. “I
don’t fit within what you think about as being the typical African
American woman,” she says. Brown, she adds, allowed her for the first
time to fit in somewhere: “Brown gave me an environment where I could
really just be me.” She concentrated in political science and French,
and followed that with a master’s in creative writing from Columbia.

Now a single mother to a young son, Barnett recently had a
comforting revelation about the impossibility of balancing work and
family. “I can’t possibly do both at the same time,” she says. “The
best I can do is focus on being the best I can possibly be when I am in
each place.”

Barnett is not afraid of revealing her own mistakes or embarrassing
moments in her monthly editor’s letter, which draws from her personal
experiences. “I decided I would like to humanize success,” she says.
“Success is a mindset. It’s a way of thinking and moving through the
world that creates a path for yourself that allows you to achieve.”

Name and Class Year:

Email:

Comment:

Code:*

The Brown Alumni Magazine is published bimonthly, in print since 1900.